Study carrel


Introduction

This is a Distant Reader "study carrel", a set of structured data intended to help the student, researcher, or scholar use & understand a corpus.

This study carrel was created from a curated subset of CORD, a collection of more than 100,000 scholarly journal articles surrounding the topic of COVID-19. This resulted in a set of 88 item(s). The original versions of these items have been saved in a cache, and each of them have been transformed & saved as a set of plain text files. All of the analysis -- "reading" -- has been done against these plain text files. For example, a short narrative report has been created. This website is a more verbose version of the narrative report.

All study carrels are self-contained -- no Internet connection is necessary to use them. Download this carrel for offline reading. The carrel is made up of many subdirectories and data files. The manifest describes each one in greater detail.

Provenance

This study carrel was originally named infection-china. It was created on 2020-12-03 at 02:14 by eric. The following query, applied against the local copy of our CORD database, was ( ( * NOT ( pdf_json:nan ) ) OR ( * NOT ( pmc_json:nan ) ) ) AND entity:"infection" AND entity:"infection" AND entity:"COVID" AND keywords:"COVID-19" AND keywords:"SARS" AND keywords:"China" .

Size & Scope

Your study carrel is 307,531 words long. Each item in your study carrel is, on average, 6,834 words long. If you dig deeper, then you might want to save yourself some time by reading a shorter item. On the other hand, if your desire is for more detail, then you might consider reading a longer item. The following illustrate the overall size of your study carrel.

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histogram of sizes
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box plot of sizes

Readability

On a scale from 0 to 100, where 0 is very difficult and 100 is very easy, your documents have an average readability score of 48. Consequently, if you want to read something more simplistic, then consider a document with a higher score. If you want something more specialized, then consider something with a lower score. The following illustrate the overall readability of your study carrel.

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histogram of readability
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box plot of readability

Word Frequencies

By merely counting & tabulating the frequency of individual words or phrases, you can begin to get an understanding of your carrel's "aboutness". Excluding "stop words", some of the more frequent words include:

covid, patients, sars, cov, coronavirus, disease, en, infection, clinical, respiratory, china, el, cases, virus, severe, novel, study, con, health, treatment, transmission, viral, acute, pneumonia, also, syndrome, se, los, infected, may, human, wuhan, symptoms, risk, pandemic, reported, outbreak, associated, pacientes, case, care, data, del, high, studies, analysis, however, mers, days, time

Using the three most frequent words, the three files containing all of those words the most are: 1) ACTUALIZACION DE LA DECLARACIÓN DE CONSENSO EN MEDICINA CRITICA PARA LA ATENCIÓN MULTIDISCIPLINARIA DEL PACIENTE CON SOSPECHA O CONFIRMACIÓN DIAGNÓSTICA DE COVID-19, 2) Management of critically ill patients with COVID-19 in ICU: statement from front-line intensive care experts in Wuhan, China, and 3) Full Issue PDF.

The most frequent two-word phrases (bigrams) include:

novel coronavirus, coronavirus disease, acute respiratory, respiratory syndrome, severe acute, en el, syndrome coronavirus, clinical characteristics, pacientes con, severe covid, respiratory distress, en pacientes, critically ill, public health, distress syndrome, los pacientes, se recomienda, middle east, east respiratory, systematic review, world health, coronavirus pneumonia, mental health, con covid, intensive care, ill patients, patients infected, health organization, health care, confirmed cases, hospitalized patients, cancer patients, convalescent plasma, united states, clinical features, lopinavir ritonavir, clinical trials, risk factors, chest ct, respiratory tract, nucleic acid, coronavirus infection, en los, respiratory failure, cytokine storm, new coronavirus, cohort study, viral load, clinical trial, incubation period

And the three file that use all of the three most frequent phrases are: 1) Coronavirus Disease 2019–COVID-19, 2) ACTUALIZACION DE LA DECLARACIÓN DE CONSENSO EN MEDICINA CRITICA PARA LA ATENCIÓN MULTIDISCIPLINARIA DEL PACIENTE CON SOSPECHA O CONFIRMACIÓN DIAGNÓSTICA DE COVID-19, and 3) The epidemiology and therapeutic options for the COVID-19.

While often deemed superficial or sophomoric, rudimentary frequencies and their associated "word clouds" can be quite insightful:

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unigrams
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bigrams

Keywords

Sets of keywords -- statistically significant words -- can be enumerated by comparing the relative frequency of words with the number of times the words appear in an entire corpus. Some of the most statistically significant keywords in your study carrel include:

sars, covid-19, china, patient, cov-2, wuhan, coronavirus, mers, disease, clinical, rna, health, infection, human, case, cancer, acute, ace2, virus, people, pcr, lpv, aki, vitamin, uso, united, und, una, uci, treatment, transmission, tcz, taiwan, sdra, respiratory, republic, recomienda, publication, pregnant, por, peep, para, pandemic, pacientes, outbreak, novel, newborn, mother, mental, maßnahmen

And now word clouds really begin to shine:

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keywords

Topic Modeling

Topic modeling is another popular approach to connoting the aboutness of a corpus. If your study carrel could be summed up in a single word, then that word might be covid, and The epidemiology and therapeutic options for the COVID-19 is most about that word.

If your study carrel could be summed up in three words ("topics") then those words and their significantly associated titles include:

  1. covid - SARS-CoV-2 jumping the species barrier: zoonotic lessons from SARS, MERS and recent advances to combat this pandemic virus
  2. patients - Management of critically ill patients with COVID-19 in ICU: statement from front-line intensive care experts in Wuhan, China
  3. en - ACTUALIZACION DE LA DECLARACIÓN DE CONSENSO EN MEDICINA CRITICA PARA LA ATENCIÓN MULTIDISCIPLINARIA DEL PACIENTE CON SOSPECHA O CONFIRMACIÓN DIAGNÓSTICA DE COVID-19

If your study carrel could be summed up in five topics, and each topic were each denoted with three words, then those topics and their most significantly associated files would be:

  1. covid, patients, sars - The Impact of Pre-existing Comorbidities and Therapeutic Interventions on COVID-19
  2. cov, sars, covid - Coronavirus Disease 2019–COVID-19
  3. en, el, con - ACTUALIZACION DE LA DECLARACIÓN DE CONSENSO EN MEDICINA CRITICA PARA LA ATENCIÓN MULTIDISCIPLINARIA DEL PACIENTE CON SOSPECHA O CONFIRMACIÓN DIAGNÓSTICA DE COVID-19
  4. covid, 2020, health - What Went Wrong: Corona and the World after the Full Stop
  5. covid, health, mental - Mental health services for infectious disease outbreaks including COVID-19: a rapid systematic review

Moreover, the totality of the study carrel's aboutness, can be visualized with the following pie chart:

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topic model

Noun & Verbs

Through an analysis of your study carrel's parts-of-speech, you are able to answer question beyonds aboutness. For example, a list of the most frequent nouns helps you answer what questions; "What is discussed in this collection?":

patients, coronavirus, disease, infection, cases, virus, study, treatment, transmission, pneumonia, symptoms, syndrome, risk, health, outbreak, pandemic, case, data, studies, days, care, time, analysis, number, cells, mortality, infections, rate, protein, use, people, patient, lung, characteristics, epidemic, review, response, countries, cell, therapy, evidence, covid-19, cancer, coronaviruses, diagnosis, receptor, children, results, system, measures

An enumeration of the verbs helps you learn what actions take place in a text or what the things in the text do. Very frequently, the most common lemmatized verbs are "be", "have", and "do"; the more interesting verbs usually occur further down the list of frequencies:

used, includes, reported, showed, infected, associated, based, increase, confirmed, causing, found, developing, suggests, treating, identified, reduce, covid-19, followed, consider, required, needed, compared, provide, emerged, occurs, related, led, spread, given, detected, hospitalized, making, presented, indicated, received, controlled, preventing, tested, demonstrated, recommends, remained, binding, affects, according, known, observed, became, published, died, inhibit

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nouns
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verbs

Proper Nouns

An extraction of proper nouns helps you determine the names of people and places in your study carrel.

SARS, COVID-19, CoV-2, China, el, CoV, Wuhan, los, Coronavirus, con, MERS, para, del, un, RNA, las, Health, ACE2, pacientes, una, CT, Disease, en, PCR, como, RT, por, Se, ARDS, es, Novel, uso, March, Italy, ICU, East, World, Middle, remdesivir, recomienda, Organization, Clinical, January, La, United, S, su, CoVs, States, IL-6

An analysis of personal pronouns enables you to answer at least two questions: 1) "What, if any, is the overall gender of my study carrel?", and 2) "To what degree are the texts in my study carrel self-centered versus inclusive?"

it, we, their, its, they, our, i, them, he, us, his, her, itself, your, you, themselves, one, she, me, ourselves, my, mg, ya, nsp7, il-6r, him, βcovs, yourself, to/, theirs, rad5, nsp10, myself, lesvos/, hydroxychloroquine, covid-19, clustalw, asc09f, 's

Below are words cloud of your study carrel's proper & personal pronouns.

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proper nouns
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pronouns

Adjectives & Verbs

Learning about a corpus's adjectives and adverbs helps you answer how questions: "How are things described and how are things done?" An analysis of adjectives and adverbs also points to a corpus's overall sentiment. "In general, is my study carrel positive or negative?"

clinical, respiratory, severe, covid-19, viral, acute, novel, human, high, early, asymptomatic, new, first, potential, higher, antiviral, immune, positive, different, medical, specific, available, common, important, several, infected, effective, possible, many, public, inflammatory, recent, non, therapeutic, current, chinese, mild, lower, low, infectious, anti, critical, retrospective, pulmonary, epidemiological, negative, ill, significant, rapid, global

also, however, well, therefore, currently, even, critically, recently, still, highly, especially, significantly, respectively, furthermore, now, mainly, rapidly, first, less, moreover, worldwide, later, previously, often, already, usually, much, particularly, approximately, yet, relatively, widely, effectively, directly, hence, initially, globally, early, far, probably, commonly, clinically, additionally, just, potentially, finally, similarly, daily, prior, closely

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adjectives
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adverbs

Next steps

There is much more to a study carrel than the things outlined above. Use this page's menubar to navigate and explore in more detail. There you will find additional features & functions including: ngrams, parts-of-speech, grammars, named entities, topic modeling, a simple search interface, etc.

Again, study carrels are self-contained. Download this carrel for offline viewing and use.

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